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Spectator and Addison
During Pope's friendship with Joseph Addison, he contributed to Addison's play Cato, as well as writing for The Guardian and The Spectator.
* Joseph Addison: On the Pleasures of the Imagination ( Spectator essays )
In 1709 Steele began to bring out Tatler, to which Addison became almost immediately a contributor: thereafter he ( with Steele ) started The Spectator, the first number of which appeared on 1 March 1711.
12 March 1672 – 1 September 1729 ) was an Irish writer and politician, remembered as co-founder, with his friend Joseph Addison, of the magazine The Spectator.
Addison discusses matrimony in The Spectator no. 482, dated Friday 12 September 1712:
The Verri brothers and Beccaria started an important cultural reformist movement centered around their journal Il Caffè (" The Coffeehouse "), which ran from the summer of 1764 for about two years, and was inspired by Addison and Steele's literary magazine, The Spectator and other such journals.
* Joseph Addison in The Spectator in 1712 recorded visiting Vauxhall Gardens where he drank a glass of Burton ale.
* March 1-The Spectator is founded by Joseph Addison and Richard Steele.
The poet John Milton popularised both Hobson and the phrase, twice commemorating him in epitaphs, and in issue 509 of Addison and Richard Steele The Spectator from 1712.
In The Spectator Addison applauded Philips for his simplicity, and for having written English eclogues unencumbered by the machinery of classical mythology.
Dennis had fallen out with Addison in April 1711, over an essay that contained a good-humoured rejection of the notion of poetic justice in The Spectator, No. 40.
Two months after the final edition, Steele and Joseph Addison, another major contributor to Tatler, co-founded The Spectator magazine.
In 1711 Joseph Addison wrote in The Spectator,
Budgell assisted Addison with his magazine, The Spectator, writing 37 numbers signed X.
"— Joseph Addison, Spectator 1711.
On the other hand, one of his mutton pies known as a " Kit-Kat ", always formed a standing dish at meetings of the club and the pie is thus itself sometimes regarded ( e. g., by Addison in the Spectator ) as the origin of the club's name.
The Female Spectator ( 4 volumes, 1744 – 46 ), a monthly periodical, was written in answer to the contemporary journal The Spectator by Joseph Addison and Richard Steele.
* Joseph Addison, Spectator no.
In November 1712 Addison and Steele sold all their right and title in one half of the copies of the first seven volumes of the Spectator to Tonson the younger, for £ 575, and all rights in the other half for a similar sum to Buckley.
After improving his writing skills through study of the Spectator by Joseph Addison and Sir Richard Steele, he writes an anonymous paper and slips it under the door of the printing house by night.
One periodical outsold and dominated all others, however, and that was The Spectator, written by Joseph Addison and Richard Steele ( with occasional contributions from their friends ).
The Spectator developed a number of pseudonymous characters, including " Mr. Spectator ," Roger de Coverley, and " Isaac Bickerstaff ", and both Addison and Steele created fictions to surround their narrators.

Spectator and soon
In 1861 The Spectator was bought by a journalist, Meredith Townsend, who soon went into partnership with Richard Holt Hutton, a theologian whose friend William Gladstone later called ‘ the first critic of the nineteenth century ’.
Van Effen wrote in French for a great part of his literary career but, influenced by a visit to London where the Tatler and Spectator were on the rise, from 1731 began to publish his Hollandsche Spectator (" Dutch Spectator ") magazine, which his death in 1735 soon brought to a close.
Freelance work for Punch and The Spectator soon followed.
An enthusiast for English periodicals, and in particular, the The Spectator of Joseph Addison and Richard Steele, soon after first issues of The Spectator he launched Le Misanthrope ( 1711 – 1712 ) ( a widely read journal referred to as " the first moralist periodical on the continent "), Le Bagatelle ( 1718 – 1719 ), Le Spectateur Français ( 1725 ) and then in his native language, the Hollandsche Spectator ( 1731 – 1735 ).

Spectator and became
The word “ club ,” in the sense of an association to promote good-fellowship and social intercourse, became common in England at the time of Tatler and The Spectator ( 1709 – 1712 ).
Editorship of The Spectator has often been part of a route to high office in the Conservative Party in the UK ; past editors include Iain Macleod, Ian Gilmour and Nigel Lawson, all of whom became cabinet minister or a springboard for a greater role in public affairs, as with Boris Johnson ( 1999 to 2005 ), the Conservative Mayor of London.
As well as being The Spectator ’ s sole proprietor and editor, he also became its chief leader-writer, general manager and literature critic.
Under Harris The Spectator became increasingly outspoken on developing international politics in the 1930s, in particular on the rise of fascism.
The Spectator, which gradually became a prosperous property, was an outlet for his views, particularly on literary, religious and philosophical subjects, in opposition to the agnostic and rationalistic opinions then current in intellectual circles, as popularized by T. H. Huxley.
In junior high school, he became a staff writer on The Spectator, the school newspaper, and at age 16, he wrote for the high school yearbook as well as editing a Boy Scout weekly, The Eagle Trail.
He became a journalist for The Times Literary Supplement, History Today and The Spectator.
Brown was educated at Eton and Bristol University and then became a freelance journalist in London, contributing to The Tatler, The Spectator, The Times Literary Supplement, Literary Review, the Evening Standard ( as a regular columnist ), The Times ( notably as parliamentary sketchwriter ; these columns were compiled into a book called A Life Inside ) and The Sunday Times ( as TV and restaurant critic ).
He became an associate editor with The Spectator.
Levin left Truth and became the political correspondent of The Spectator.
From 1964 he became a Spectator columnist, writing on the press and TV, and in 1969 published The Neophiliacs: A Study of the Revolution in English Life In The Fifties and Sixties, a highly critical analysis of the role played by fantasy in the political and social life of those decades.
In the mid-70s he contributed a regular quiz to Melvyn Bragg's BBC literary programme Read All About It, and he returned to The Spectator as a weekly contributor ( 1976 – 1981 ), when he also became a lead book-reviewer for The Sunday Telegraph.
Established in 1859 as the Hamilton Courier, it became the Hamilton Spectator and Grange District Advertiser in 1860, and later The Hamilton Spectator.
In March 1992, Brock had authored a sharply critical story about Hill in The American Spectator magazine which became the nucleus of the book, The Real Anita Hill.
The " Arkansas Project " name that later became famous was conceived as a joke ; the actual name used within the Spectator and the Scaife foundation was the " Editorial Improvement Project.
He became a publisher and printer, his name appearing on The New Zealand Spectator and Cook's Strait Guardian as a printer He was a prominent speaker, and was instrumental in carrying a Bill to establish a municipal corporation for Wellington and a railway link to the Wairarapa.
In 2006 Ontario Universities became subject to Freedom of Information legislation, and the Hamilton Spectator newspaper applied to request release of the contract ; the university fought for two years to prevent this release until it finally provided the newspaper with the contract in 2008.
Vosmaer became a contributor to, and then the leading spirit and editor of, a journal which played an immense part in the awakening of Dutch literature ; this was the Nederlandsche Spectator, in which a great many of his own works, in prose and verse, originally appeared.
He became a writer and Production Manager for a film company named Spectator which failed, losing him a considerable amount of money.
" She moved back to Oregon and became involved with the Suffrage Movement in Portland, worked for the Spectator, and married Paul Trullinger.
Buckley later became the printer of The Spectator.
She worked on the ITV show Candid Camera and later became a food writer for The Spectator and for 15 years provided weekly lunches for personalities, including the Prince of Wales.

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